I’ll be upfront about something – I was not a supplement person. Actually, that’s not quite true. I was a person who bought supplements enthusiastically every January, lined them up on the kitchen counter, and then quietly stopped noticing them by February. If that sounds familiar, read on. Because Zooki genuinely broke that cycle for me – and I want to explain why before you assume this is just another glowing brand write-up.
The short version: Zooki makes liposomal and collagen supplements designed to actually absorb properly – not just pass through you. The slightly longer version involves six weeks of daily sachets, a very patient partner who kept asking “are you still taking those vitamin things?”, and me having to admit that yes, something might actually be working.
What is liposomal absorption – and does it actually matter?
Here’s the bit that grabbed me. Standard supplements – your bog-standard vitamin C tablet, your collagen capsule – can have really poor bioavailability. Meaning a lot of what you swallow doesn’t actually reach your cells. Liposomal technology wraps the active ingredient in tiny fat-based particles (liposomes) that protect it through your digestive system and help it absorb at a cellular level. The science is genuinely interesting, and Zooki has built their entire brand around it.
They’ve won multiple awards – including the King’s Award for Enterprise in Innovation – which I’ll be honest, I checked, because that’s the kind of claim that can be complete nonsense or actually meaningful. It’s meaningful. Their liposomal vitamin C range in particular has been through clinical studies, and the results showed significantly better plasma levels compared to standard supplements. So this isn’t just a clever marketing term. It’s a real, documented difference in how your body processes what you’re taking.

The Zooki collagen range – and what I actually noticed
I started with the Collagen Zooki sachets – liquid collagen in little flavoured sachets that you mix into water or just knock back straight. Marine collagen, hydrolysed, with vitamin C included for absorption support. The taste? Genuinely fine. Not “disguise it in a smoothie or you’ll regret it” fine – actually decent. The passion fruit one in particular didn’t make me grimace, which is more than I can say for most health products I’ve reviewed.
Week one to two: nothing dramatic. Week three: I noticed my nails weren’t breaking as consistently at the corners. By week five, my skin was looking – I don’t want to oversell this – calmer? Less dull? I’d usually put it down to hormones or sleep or whatever, but I genuinely hadn’t changed anything else in my routine. Collagen production does decline from your mid-20s onwards, so prioritising it in your early 30s makes actual biological sense. It’s not vanity. It’s maintenance.
The full Zooki collagen range includes marine collagen sachets, capsules, and powders – different formats for different routines. I’d recommend the sachets if you’re likely to procrastinate on capsules (I absolutely would). Browse the full Zooki collagen range here and see which format fits your day.
The gut-skin connection – and why I added Zooki biotics to my routine
About three weeks in, I started looking at their Biotics range – pre and probiotic supplements, also in liposomal form. The gut-skin axis is something I’d read about endlessly but never really acted on. The thinking is that gut microbiome health has a knock-on effect on skin inflammation, barrier function, and even breakout patterns. I’m a sceptic at heart, so I added just the probiotic sachets alongside my collagen and waited.
Zooki’s approach – liposomal delivery across vitamins, collagen, creatine, electrolytes, and biotics – means you can build a supplement stack that actually absorbs. Most of us aren’t getting the benefit we think we are from standard tablets and capsules.
The whole Zooki range is built around this same absorption-first philosophy. Whether you’re looking at their electrolytes for hydration, their creatine for performance, or their biotics for gut health – the liposomal or liquid delivery format is consistent across all of it. It’s a cohesive approach rather than just a product line that grew sideways. I appreciated that.

My honest verdict after six weeks
Here’s what I’ll admit: I can’t prove it was Zooki and not some other variable. But I’ve taken collagen supplements before from other brands and felt nothing. I’ve taken vitamin C tablets for years without any noticeable effect. With Zooki’s liposomal versions, something actually felt different – and I’m pretty stubborn about giving supplements credit. My usual position is “it’s probably just placebo,” so when I start noticing things, that matters.
The one thing I’d tweak? The price point is premium – and I get it, the technology is real and the research is there, but it is definitely an investment rather than a casual buy. The subscribe-and-save option brings it down meaningfully, which helps. Worth it if you’re serious about actually absorbing what you’re paying for – which, when you think about it, is kind of the whole point of taking supplements in the first place.
If you’ve been circling the supplement world and feeling like nothing ever works, I’d genuinely suggest trying a brand that’s built its entire identity around actual bioavailability science. Zooki isn’t chasing trends. They’re doing something genuinely different – and after six weeks, I’m a slightly reluctant convert.
